Clark v. Webster

384 F. Supp. 2d 371, 2005 WL 2092989
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedAugust 31, 2005
DocketCIV.04-184-P-H
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 384 F. Supp. 2d 371 (Clark v. Webster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Webster, 384 F. Supp. 2d 371, 2005 WL 2092989 (D. Me. 2005).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

HORNBY, District Judge.

This lawsuit for a violation of constitutional rights grew out of an afternoon confrontation between a Maine Drug Enforcement agent and a young woman in western Maine. The drug agent was convinced that he was about to obtain a search warrant from a state judge for marijuana-related evidence in the young woman’s condominium unit. He therefore “secured” the unit. The young woman was resentful of the agent’s and two Bridgton police officers’ intrusion, offended that the agent concluded that her hard-earned waitressing tips were drug money, and fearful that he would seize her money. I find both their stories credible and consistent in many ways, although their differing perspectives color their interpretations of the events. On some important matters, however, they completely disagree. In ways that make a difference legally, I conclude that the events did not happen just as the young woman and her boyfriend (the other condominium tenant) recall. 1 *373 As a result, I conclude that the defendant agent did not conduct an illegal search or seizure. It is important to note, however, that ultimately there was no evidence that either the young woman or her boyfriend was involved in any criminal activity.

I presided at a bench trial on July 27-29, 2005. After considering the evidence and the arguments, I make the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

I.FINDINGS OF FACT

1. On August 11, 2003, the plaintiff Sara Clark, then three years out of high school, brought almost $14,000 in cash to the Norway Savings Bank. The teller for the transaction was Amy Perrault.

2. Clark’s currency consisted of a large number of one-dollar bills, 600 five-dollar bills, 600 ten-dollar bills, and 200 twenty-dollar bills. 2

3. Clark brought the money to the bank in plastic sandwich baggies. Drugs are often packaged in such baggies.

4. Clark did not deposit the money into her bank account but instead asked to exchange her cash for larger bills (mostly hundreds). When Perrault proceeded to fill out a Currency Transaction Report (Joint Ex. 2) (a report required for transactions over $10,000), Clark asked her why she needed to do so.

5. Perrault gave Clark $13,900 in hundred-dollar bills, plus a five-dollar bill and three one-dollar bills for a total of $13,908. Clark left the bank, went home and put the money in a safe in the condominium unit she shared with her boyfriend, co-plaintiff Sean Gagnon.

6. According to Perrault and other bank employees, the currency Clark exchanged smelled strongly of marijuana. In fact, the odor was so strong that the branch manager was concerned that the odor would migrate to other currency in the vault and that when that currency was distributed to customers, the Bank’s reputation would be tarnished.

7. Laurie Griffin Polland, the teller supervisor, observed the transaction between Clark and Perrault and noticed pieces of a greenish-brown leaf-like substance in the baggies. Perrault threw the baggies away after the transaction was complete.

8. Perrault filled out a Suspicious Activity Report (Joint Ex. 6) after Clark left the bank. Perrault wrote in this report that the money “had a distinct aroma of marijuana.” Joint Ex. 6 at 3.

9. The next day, August 12, a bank security officer called the Maine Drug Enforcement Agency (“MDEA”). The defendant, Steven Webster, then an MDEA agent, was assigned to investigate.

10. Webster went to the bank around noontime on August 12, 2003.

11. Bank personnel showed Webster the money Clark had exchanged, the baggies (retrieved from a trash dumpster), the Currency Transaction Report and the Suspicious Activity Report. Perrault also provided him a written statement (Joint Ex. 5) describing the transaction and the marijuana odor. Webster watched a videotape of the transaction. He noticed on the Currency Transaction Report that Clark was a waitress, and also noticed from subpoenaed bank records (Def.Ex. 27) that she had received checks from Friendly’s restaurant. Webster saw in Clark’s subpoenaed bank records that she had less than $500 in her bank account.

*374 12. Bank employees gave Webster two pieces of a green, leafy substance that they said came out of at least one of Clark’s baggies. Webster, who has extensive drug training, thought the substance looked like marijuana. These pieces were about half the size of a pencil eraser. The bank employees told Webster that they had retrieved the baggies from the trash dumpster, where the baggies had been overnight. Polland told Webster that she had seen more of that substance in the baggies before they were thrown away. Webster conducted a field test on the substance, but it did not test positive for marijuana. He had never tried before to test such a small sample of marijuana.

13. Webster smelled the money and the baggies and confirmed that both had a strong odor of marijuana.

14. At this point, Webster had a suspicion that Clark was trafficking in marijuana, but believed that he did not yet have probable cause to search her residence and that a judge would refuse to issue a search warrant. To further his investigation, he called the phone number Clark had provided the Bank, received no answer and left a voice message. (The phone he called was actually that of the mother of co-plaintiff Sean Gagnon.)

15. Webster enlisted assistance from local Bridgton police officers Douglas Taft and Bernie King and all three arrived at Clark’s rented condominium around 3:15 p.m. Webster still did not believe that he had probable cause to obtain a warrant to search the condominium.

16. Clark’s condominium is a basement level unit. Access to that and one other unit is through a common outside door at ground level. The other unit’s interior door is at this same level; Clark’s unit is down a flight of stairs.

17. When the law enforcement officers arrived, Taft proceeded around the outside to ensure that no one left the unit, while Webster and King rang the doorbell on the ground level outside door.

18. Clark held two waitressing jobs, one at Friendly’s Ice Cream and the other at the White Mountain Hotel. She had injured herself at work that day at the White Mountain Hotel (receiving second degree burns on her arms from a coffee spill), had visited the hospital, then returned home early and slept on the couch.

19. When the doorbell awoke her, Clark came to the outside door. Webster identified himself as a drug enforcement agent, and asked if she was Sara Clark (he recognized her from the bank’s videotape), if she had exchanged approximately $13,900 at the Norway Savings Bank, and where she got all the currency she had exchanged. Clark responded affirmatively to the first two questions and said that she had saved the money from tips from her two waitressing jobs.

20. Webster asked Clark why the currency smelled like marijuana. Clark responded that she did not know why the money smelled, and that “all money smells.” 3

21.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
384 F. Supp. 2d 371, 2005 WL 2092989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-webster-med-2005.